Mayor Rob Ford caught reading while driving
Mayor Rob Ford caught reading while driving
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This appeared on Facebook later in the day |
More details here and here.
Photo by Twitter user @ryanghaughton.

Political views and news from a Canadian social-democratic perspective.
Mayor Rob Ford caught reading while driving
![]() |
This appeared on Facebook later in the day |
Posted by
Thor
at
19:48
0
comments
Labels: Canada, NDP, Oil, pipelines, Tom Mulcair
Since Tom Mulcair was chosen to lead the party back in March, the NDP has maintained a strong support across Canada, which has continued to grow. The opposite is true for the Conservatives. Their support has been steadily dropping. Canadians are becoming more aware of the scandals plaguing them. And the exposure of the omnibus budget bill has not helped the Conservatives either. The Liberals are maintaining their support in the low 20s.
Of Significant Note:
Some things of significant note about the latest poll numbers from Forum Research are that the NDP are now ahead of the Conservatives in the Prairies (43% to 33%), and are tied in Ontario at 34% each.
Previously, the Conservatives led in Alberta, Ontario and the Prairies, while the NDP led in Quebec, BC and in the Atlantic provinces. Now the Conservatives only lead in Alberta, are tied in Ontario, and the NDP leads everywhere else.
Also, Bob Rae's decision to bow out of the Liberal leadership race boosted his approval rating to 40% nationally.
Poll Standings
CANADA
NDP 37%
Con 30%
Lib 22%
Green 5%
Bloc 6%
ONTARIO
NDP 34%
Con 34%
Lib 28%
Green 3%
QUEBEC
NDP 41%
Con 15%
Lib 18%
Green 4%
Bloc 22%
BC
NDP 45%
Con 30%
Lib 17%
Green 7%
ALBERTA
NDP 13%
Con 60%
Lib 18%
Green 7%
PRAIRIES
NDP 43%
Con 33%
Lib 19%
Green 5%
ATLANTIC
NDP 44%
Con 28%
Lib 22%
Green 4%
This poll had a sample size of 1529, which has a margin of error of 2.51%, 19 times out of 20.
Other poll findings:
Favourable support of party leaders:
Tom Mulcair 39%
Stephen Harper 31%
Bob Rae 40%
Net Approval (approve minus disapprove)
Tom Mulcair +8%
Stephen Harper -30%
Bob Rae +8%
Forum Research:
In a sign that Canadians appreciate a clean exit, Bob Rae's approval rating has
increased from one third last month (33%) to 4-in-10 now (40%), and he has a
net approval (approve minus disapprove) of +8. This compares very favourably
with Tom Mulcair's approval of 4-in-10 (39%), and net approval of +8. Both these
scores easily outdistance those for Stephen Harper (31% approval, net approval
-30).
Majority expects government to be defeated in next election
In a measure of perception rather than voting intention, more than one half of
Canadians expect the current government to be defeated in the next election
(53%), while one third expect it to be re-elected (34%). While this is very similar
to levels of Conservative support, it should be noted that just 8-in-10
Conservative voters expect their party to be re-elected (79%), while one tenth do
not expect this to happen (11%). In an exact reversal of opinion, 8-in-10 NDP
supporters do not think the government will be re-elected (79%), and one tenth
think it will be (11%).
Trudeau as leader improves Liberal fortunes
If Justin Trudeau were leader of the Liberal party and the election were held
today, while the reduced plurality (32%) would still support the NDP, the Liberals
and the Conservatives would draw even in second place, with just more than a
quarter of the electorate each (28% each). The Bloc would claim the support of
5% and the Green Party of 4%. It is clear that Trudeau draws support (about 5%)
from the NDP.
Justin Trudeau leads all other contenders
When asked to select from a list of contenders for the Liberal leadership, one
quarter of Canadians in general (23%) and one third of Liberal supporters (33%)
pick Justin Trudeau, and no one else comes close. Close to one half of Canadians
(44%) and one quarter of Liberal supporters (26%) don't know who to select.
John Manley (7%) was more popular among Conservative supporters (13%) and
residents of Manitoba / Saskatchewan and Alberta (14% each). Like Trudeau,
Dominic Leblanc (4%) had highest support from residents of the Atlantic (11%)
and Quebec (6%). Gerard Kennedy (5%) was more likely to be selected by
Ontarians and British Columbians (8% each) than those of other provinces. Martha Hall-Findlay was more popular among Albertans (6%). In addition, Marc
Garneau had the support of close to a tenth of Quebeckers (8%).
Majority of Liberals approve of Trudeau as leader
When asked directly if they approved or disapproved of Justin Trudeau as leader
of the Liberals, the majority of party supporters (58%) approve, while just one
fifth disapprove (21%). Among the general populace, there is a split in opinion,
and just less than 4-in-10 approve (39%) and just more than a third disapprove
(34%).
Quebeckers had the highest approval for Trudeau as the leader of the Liberal
Party (49%; compared to 40% Atlantic, 39% Ontario, 36% Manitoba /
Saskatchewan, 31% British Columbia, 25% Alberta).
More Analysis:
Dave Akin's On The Hill: Has It Ever Been So Good To Be A New Democrat?
One thing that people are debating in the comments to Dave's post is that Ed Broadbent had 40% support in between polls back in 1986, but that dropped significantly when it came to election time and the NDP remained in 3rd place. The major differences here are that there was a huge rise in support for the NDP before the most recent election, at which time the NDP became the official opposition with a large number of seats, and that support for the party has pretty much maintained since that time.
Posted by
Thor
at
12:24
1 comments
Labels: Bob Rae, Canada, conservatives, Forum Research, Justin Trudeau, Liberals, NDP, poll, Stephen Harper, Tom Mulcair
You would think that the premier would do this if he was really interested in making things work and doing his job. This shows that Andrea is serious about making parliament work for Ontarians.
NDP Leader Andrea Horwath is asking both Dalton McGuinty and Tim
Hudak to meet this weekend to ensure passage of Ontario’s Budget.
“The people who sent us here last fall want us to focused on their
jobs, their health and the economy, not another campaign. We can spend
the next four days getting real results here and avoid four weeks on the
campaign trail,” said Horwath. ”Every party Leader has said they don’t
want a needless election. I know I don’t. I know we can make this work.”
It has been less than 10 months since Ontarians sent a minority
government to Queen’s Park. In that time, New Democrats have been
working hard for real results that protect local hospitals, create new
childcare spaces and ensure fairness by stopping corporate tax giveaways
and enacting the NDP Fairness Tax on high income earners.
Horwath noted that all parties are seeking changes to the government
omnibus bill and a total of 214 amendments have been proposed by all
three parties.
“We all agree this Bill can be improved. We all agree we don’t want
to hit the campaign trail.
There’s too many important challenges facing
families to waste time on a needless election,” said Horwath.
http://ontariondp.com/en/andrea-horwath-hopes-to-meet-with-mcguinty-and-hudak-to-get-budget-passed
Posted by
Thor
at
11:02
0
comments
Labels: Andrea Horwath, NDP, Ontario, Ontario Budget, Ontario NDP
Dean Del Mastro is Harper's Parliamentary Secretary. He is also the point man for the Cons in dealing with the election fraud scandal. He is currently being investigated for cheating on election expenses (if found guilty he could face 5 years in jail).
Now, it has been discovered that there appears to have been some illegal contribution activity towards Del Mastro's campaign.
So far, the guilt here points to Dean's cousin, David Del Mastro, and the people who were paid to make additional contributions for David. But, there is no evidence (yet) that Dean knew of this contribution plan.
Excerpts from The Ottawa Citizen: Employees linked to cousin’s company each gave $1,000 to Del Mastro campaign:
Posted by
Thor
at
09:38
3
comments
Labels: conservatives, crooks and liars, Dean Del Mastro, election fraud
From TTC Riders site:
Just as we savour our victory in winning back four Light Rail Transit
lines for Toronto, an even greater threat is presenting itself—two
provincial government initiatives that may foster privatization of our
public transit systems. They are:
1) Schedule 28 (The Government Services and Service Providers Act,
2012), which is a section of the provincial government’s Budget Bill 55
that goes for a final vote at the Legislature this Wednesday, June 20th.
There is still opportunity for an amendment to eliminate Schedule 28
this Monday, during the meeting of the Standing Committee on Financial
and Economic Affairs. We can call or email an MPP today and Monday
morning and ask them to oppose Schedule 28. Here is why:
Section 28 will give a new Cabinet Minister sweeping power to authorize
contracting out or privatization of any and all Ontario Government
Services, with no requirement for transparency or accountability—even if
this contradicts the mandates and regulations of other ministries.
These measures will also apply to local municipal services and
agencies. Concerns are compounded by Ontario’s obligations under
international agreements, such as GATS, CETA, and NAFTA, which may
prohibit favouring local contractors over international bidders. In
addition, once a service is contracted out, restoring public ownership
may be prohibited. (Here is a legal opinion on the Provincial budget bill that expresses many of these same concerns.)
WHAT YOU CAN DO TODAY:
Posted by
Thor
at
08:12
0
comments
Labels: Ontario, Ontario Liberals, privatization, public transit, TTC
Watch the video here:
http://ontariondp.com/en/horwath-to-premier-stop-election-threats-and-pass-budget
Queen’s Park - New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath
called on the Premier to stop the election threats and work with all
parties to pass the Budget.
“I want to spend the next four days working to pass the Budget. It’s
disappointing that the Premier wants to spend the next four weeks trying
to win back a majority,” said Horwath. “I want to keep working here to
pass this Budget so parents can get the childcare they need and
Ontario’s richest will pay their fair share. I plan to keep my word and
pass the Budget, and I hope the Premier will keep his word and do the
same.”
“Making minority government work is hard work. It won’t happen if we
threaten to hit the campaign trail every time we hit a bump in the
road,” she added.
Yesterday, Premier McGuinty threatened to call an election because a
government committee had passed amendments to a 300 page omnibus bill
connected to the Budget. New Democrats have committed to passing the
Bill but are addressing serious concerns raised by the public. For
example, Ontario’s Ombudsman says parts of the Bill will lead to
“erosion oversight”. Dr. David Suzuki says other sections, “reduce the
level of protection and undermine public management of cherished
forests, lakes, and rivers and the immeasurable benefits they provide.”
“Nobody said making the Legislature work is easy. But that is the
job that Ontario gave us,” said Horwath. “My door is always open to
discuss issues with the Premier and to work with all parties to tackle
Ontario’s challenges. I hope the Premier sees reason and doesn’t call an
election no one wants.”
Posted by
Thor
at
07:02
0
comments
Labels: Andrea Horwath, NDP, Ontario Budget, Ontario NDP
Premier Dalton McGuinty has been saying that Andrea Horwath and the NDP have reneged on a deal. This is completely false.
QUEEN’S PARK — Andrea Horwath and the Ontario NDP
have been clear that Bill 55 has serious problems. From the day
following the introduction of the budget New Democrats have said they
would make amendments to the budget.
“Horwath left the door open to her party offering additional tweaks
to the budget in future readings and amendments in committee.” CBC.ca, 23 May, 2012
“But Horwath said the New Democrats only “were committed to allowing
the process to go forward,” so that it could be further scrutinized and
amended…
“I’ve been clear from Day One that I want to see some scrutiny of
that budget bill — it’s 330 pages long, it’s a significant piece of
legislation that has some serious consequences and our job as opposition
is to scrutinize that bill,” she said. CBC.ca, 24 May, 2012
“’This budget has very little to offer,’ NDP Leader Andrea Horwath
said, adding it ‘falls short on key fronts’… her finance critic Michael
Prue suggested the party may try to recraft bill more to their liking
through amendments.” Timmins Daily Press, 28 March, 2012
“[T]he government has been forced to make this Liberal budget a
little more fair for everyday Ontarians, but New Democrats know very
well that this budget still falls very short for the people of this
province.” Andrea Horwath, Hansard, 24 April, 2012
“All bets are off though for votes on the actual budget legislation,
which Horwath said her party may well try to amend further.” The Barrie Examiner, 25 April, 2012
“The people who elected us want us to keep working on the challenges
that they’re facing… Basically, they want us to do our jobs, not
rubber-stamp a 300-page omnibus bill before people have a chance even to
look at it.” Andrea Horwath, Hansard, 28 May, 2012
“She [Horwath] said she made it clear during a meeting with Premier
Dalton McGuinty and their chiefs of staff that she intended to call for
public hearings on the budget bill and propose amendments.” Globe and Mail, 24 May, 2012
http://ontariondp.com/en/fact-check-ndp-problems-with-bill-55-are-old-news
Posted by
Thor
at
14:19
0
comments
Labels: Andrea Horwath, Dalton McGuinto, NDP, Ontario, Ontario Budget, Ontario NDP
Posted by
Thor
at
23:38
0
comments
Labels: budget, Canada, environment, jobs, NDP, Olivia Chow, unemployment
http://ontariondp.com/en/statement-by-ndp-leader-andrea-horwath-on-the-2012-budget
“Every day since the election, I’ve worked hard to make minority government work. I’m proud of what we’ve been able to achieve.
Posted by
Thor
at
23:09
0
comments
Labels: Andrea Horwath, NDP, Ontario, Ontario Budget
This picture from the This Is Not My Government Facebook Page, is currently going viral on Facebook (at least).
Posted by
Thor
at
20:02
2
comments
Labels: Canada, crooks and liars, fascism, Stephen Harper
Posted by
Thor
at
18:03
0
comments
Labels: budget, Canada, Nathan Cullen, NDP
Today on the Rob and Doug show. Doug Ford (speaking to Rob):
“They’re so many great teams, I wouldn’t want to pick one over the other. I guess (in the) Euro, you go back to the ancestors — boy, we go back quite a ways, but I’m not too sure — is there any WASPy teams on there? We’re just Canadian,” he said with a laugh. “Anyways — well, you’re married to the Polack, so you gotta cheer for the Polish team.”
....
Here's the best part (in reference to his Polish comment):
Doug Ford: “I didn’t realize it was derogatory."
Then, later in the show:
Doug Ford joked that homeless people should be given plastic bags to sell outside stores after Toronto’s bag ban comes into effect
From
Toronto Star: Councillor Doug Ford apologizes for using ‘Polack’ to describe Mayor Rob Ford’s wife
More Doug + foot + mouth - brains quotes here - from the same day on the show. Listener Mel has a good point that the mayor and Doug did zero preparation going into council to try to get the 5 cent bag tax stopped, so much of the blame of how things turned out must lie with them. Doug still has no clue and proceeds to put his foot in his mouth with his response to listener Mel.
Posted by
Thor
at
19:31
1 comments
Labels: buffoons, bumpkins, Doug Ford, Rob and Doug show, Rob Ford Nation, Toronto
Bill C-304: Hate Speech Clause's Repeal Gives White Supremacists Rare Moment Of Glee
Posted by
Thor
at
12:31
0
comments
Labels: Canada, Christian Right, hate speech, human rights, Human Rights Act, Stephen Harper
Posted by
Thor
at
11:44
1 comments
Labels: Canada, Canadian Dollar, Conrad Black, income gap, NDP, Tom Mulcair
Facebook has blocked blogspot.ca. This means anyone with a blog on Blogger in Canada can't post their links to Facebook. I've written them about it this morning. Hopefully they will unblock it soon.
Here is the message that comes up if you try to post a blogspot.ca link:
Posted by
Thor
at
12:22
4
comments
Labels: blogspot.ca, Facebook. Blogger
Posted by
Thor
at
09:53
0
comments
Labels: Alberta, Canada, manufacturing, NDP, Oil, resources, Saskatchewan, Thomas Mulcair, Tom Mulcair
Posted by
Thor
at
09:01
1 comments
Over the past few years the news reporting and columns in the G&M
have really gone down hill, IMHO. I used to read a lot of the G&M as
part of my daily news reads. But lately, I read maybe a few articles
per month now. So, for me, no big loss.
The Globe and Mail announced today that they will limit free on-line reading beginning in the Fall.
Toronto Star article.
The metered paywall will allow site visitors to read a certain number of
stories per month for free, starting in the fall. The number of free
clicks hasn’t been decided yet, Crawley said. The paywall will be for
the entire site, not just the Report On Business, as previously
anticipated.
See also:
David Climenhaga's Alberta Diary blog: A leaky paywall won't keep the Globe and Mail afloat
If the Globe is so desperate it has to stop paying staff to survive, a
leaky paywall to protect uninspired copy produced by overwhelmed journos
isn’t going to save it.
Posted by
Thor
at
22:41
0
comments
Labels: Globe and Mail, MSM
Posted by
Thor
at
10:23
0
comments
Okay, wouldn't it have made sense for Hyer to discuss his concerns with
Mulcair BEFORE taking an extreme action that he now obviously regrets?
All of this only shows poor judgment on Hyer's part.
Hyer was
really just sore because he wasn't picked for a shadow cabinet position.
Of course he wasn't - because he voted against the party on a key issue, more than once.
And, regarding that key issue - the Long Gun Registry. The NDP's aim
was and is not to support it as-is (was), but to improve it so that it both
serves the purpose of improved safety and as a useful tool for law
enforcement regarding crimes, AND so that the licensing costs and
procedures are not so annoying to legitimate gun owners, especially
those in rural Canada where gun ownership is often a necessity.
I say, either cut him loose and find a more responsible NDP candidate
for that riding, or, bring him back and put him to work on helping to
improve the gun registry procedures to make it more reasonable for rural Canadians.
CBC: MP Bruce Hyer open to rejoining NDP caucus, if invited.
Posted by
Thor
at
00:21
0
comments
Labels: Bruce Hyer, Canada, long-gun registry, NDP, Tom Mulcair
Mark Sept. 5, 6 and 7 on your calendars. That is when Toronto Mayor Rob Ford will be in court regarding his breach of a conflict of interest law. If the judge finds against him, he will be removed from office and banned from running for public office for 7 years.
Toronto Star
Mayor Rob Ford will be in court in early September refuting a conflict of interest allegation that, if proven, would force him from office.
Lawyer Clayton Ruby, representing a Toronto resident who filed the complaint, announced Friday that Superior Court Justice Charles Hackland will hear the case Sept. 5, 6 and 7.
Posted by
Thor
at
11:00
0
comments
Labels: buffoons, bumpkins, conflict-of-interest, Rob Ford, Toronto
Two polls were released today: Forum (April 25 - sample of 1744), and Nanos (April 18 - sample of 1200). The Forum poll, having a much larger sample, is the more accurate of the two. It is also more recent, so it will give us a better picture regarding recent events in Parliament.
Forum poll findings
The findings here are that the NDP is now in the lead, and Tom Mulcair's popularity has shot up.
Comparison between March 30 and April 25 Forum Polls:
Party - March 30 - April 25 - change
Posted by
Thor
at
12:40
0
comments
Labels: Canada, NDP, polls, Stephen Harper, Thomas Mulcair, Tom Mulcair
ThreeHundredEight.com: Massive NDP leads in Quebec, Ontario competitive: Two federal polls conducted recently in Quebec by Forum Research and CROP indicate that the New Democrats have not only taken the lead, th...
The Federal NDP are doing well in Quebec and improving in Ontario.
The big story here is not how well they are doing in Quebec as that has been known since the end of March (there have been a number of polls showing that they are, by far, back on top in Quebec since the convention March 24th), but how well they are doing in Ontario compared to election time.
Here is a comparison of how the parties are faring in Ontario
Party - Election - April 18, 2012
Con - 44% - 36% (down 8%)
NDP - 26% - 32% (up 6%)
Lib - 25% - 24% (down 1%)
(Source: Forum Research poll April 23, 2012 - sample size 980)
The general trend here is that the Conservatives are steadily dropping, the Liberals have stayed about the same, while the NDP has continued the trend of increasing support that started just before the election. This is huge for the NDP as Ontario has so many seats, and for the NDP to become the next government, they will need to significantly increase their seats here. If they can continue this trend of increasing support in Ontario over the next 3 years, we will see an NDP government in 2015.
The latest Forum Research poll has the Ontario NDP overtaking the Liberals in support and Andrea Horwath continuing to be, by far, the most popular of the 3 main party leaders.
Current party standings compared to standings at election time Oct 2011:
NDP 31% (23%) - up 8%
PC 34% (35%) - up 1%
Lib 28% (38%) - down 10%
Green 3% (5%) - up 1%
Current leader popularity compared to Jan 2011:
Horwath (NDP) 46% (40%)
McGuinty (Lib) 30% (33%)
Hudak (PC) 24% (26%)
The NDP budget proposals for a wealthy surtax and to cap provincial executive salaries are very popular.
For more details, see
Toronto Star: Ontario budget: Andrea Horwath's tax-the-rich scheme 'hugely popular', poll suggests
Forum Research
Posted by
Thor
at
14:01
0
comments
Labels: Andrea Horwath, Forum Research, Ontario NDP, poll
kirbycairo: Why I don't Believe in a Merger. . . . .: I don't think I am naive. Nor am I ignorant of contemporary or historical political issues; I have made a careful study of political philoso...
Great post by Kirbycairo. Click the link above to read the whole thing.
Posted by
Thor
at
05:37
0
comments
Labels: Canada, crooks and liars, looters in suits, Stephen Harper
Centa says the questions of whether Ford improperly took funding from
his family company and overspent his campaign limit are important to
the provincial Municipal Elections Act, and to democracy itself.
“Mr. Ford was, and is, represented by
excellent counsel and we think the interests of justice are best served
when both parties are represented by capable counsel to . . . allow the
court to make the best decision possible.”
Ruby cites the same pro bono principle but is more pointed when it comes to Ford’s conduct.
“I think (Ford) is doing bad, bad
things,” Ruby said. “It’s not a left-right thing . . . He came in as a
bully determined to demonize anyone who disagrees with him, and is a
person whose approach to governance is not what I think is in the
Canadian public interest.
“If Mayor Ford gets a pass, for
whatever reason he may advance, why would everyone not get a pass, and
then integrity doesn’t have the importance that the legislation of
Ontario placed on it.”
- From the Toronto Star: Mayor Rob Ford vs the lawyers
Posted by
Thor
at
12:46
0
comments
Labels: conservatives, corruption, crooks and liars, Rob Ford, Toronto
See the ad here:
Toronto Star: New NDP TV ad emphasizes continuity over change
“Throughout his public life, Tom Mulcair has a proven track-record of
fighting for people,” said NDP National Director Chantal Vallerand in a
statement. “These ads will help reach out to all those Canadians who
have been abandoned by the Conservative government. Our message is quite
simply that unlike Stephen Harper, Tom Mulcair will fight for you.”
Posted by
Thor
at
14:39
1 comments
Labels: Canada, NDP, Olivia Chow, Thomas Mulcair
A Léger Marketing poll for The Gazette and Le Devoir April 2-4 shows the following support among decided voters:
NDP 33%
Conservatives 32%
Liberals 19%
Green 8%
[Bloc not listed but most likely about 6-7% nationally]
In Quebec:
NDP 47% (up 4 points since the election - up 19 points here since Thomas Mulcair was elected NDP leader)
Bloc 29%
Conservatives 10%
Liberals 10%
Posted by
Thor
at
18:21
0
comments
Labels: Canada, NDP, polls, Thomas Mulcair
The other day I wrote about 2 polls that showed the NDP tied with Conservatives for support. A third poll with more recent data affirms this trend. Harris-Decima has released their poll results (March 22-April 2) that show:
National support:
Conservatives 34%
NDP 32%
(a statistical tie between the NDP and the Conservatives)
Liberals 19%
Green 8%
Bloc 6%
The NDP are leading in BC (44%), Quebec (39%), and Atlantic Canada (36%). The 2 regions that the NDP lead in all three polls are BC and Quebec.
Some other numbers of note from the poll:
Posted by
Thor
at
00:52
0
comments
Two poll results from March (early March and then just after Mulcair won the leadership of the NDP), by Environics in early March and by Forum in late March, show the NDP tied with the Conservatives.
The Environics poll from March 6-18, 2012, had the NDP and Conservatives tied at 30% each (a drop of 10% for the Conservatives). The Liberals were at 20%
The Forum poll from March 26-27, 2012 - just after Mulcair's first couple of days in Parliament as party leader , had the NDP and Conservatives tied at 35% each and the Liberals at 19% (a drop of 3% for the Conservatives, a rise of 7% for the NDP and a drop of 6% for the Liberals, since the last Forum poll a month ago).
More details on the recent Forum poll with comparisons to their previous poll:
Most effective opposition:
NDP 40% (up from 32%)
Liberals 22% (down from 30%)
Approval rating of each leader (virtually tied):
Stephen Harper 34%
Thomas Mulcair 32%
Bob Rae 32%
Disapproval rating of each leader:
Thomas Mulcair: 22%
Bob Rae: 41%
Stephen Harper: 58%
26% say they are more likely to vote for the NDP now that Thomas Mulcair is the party leader. This includes 23% Liberal supporters, 8% Green party supporters, 40% Bloc supporters and 5% Conservative supporters.
Seat projections from this poll compared to seats at election time:
Conservatives: 151 (155)
NDP: 120 (103)
Liberals 25 (34)
Bloc 11 (4)
Green 1 (1)
This would result in a minority Conservative government.
Support for joint nomination meetings is dropping compared to a month ago:
NDP supporters 51% (59%)
Liberal supporters 50% (60%)
The NDP are leading in Quebec, The Prairies, and in BC.
Posted by
Thor
at
18:05
0
comments
Labels: Canada, NDP, polls, Thomas Mulcair